CHAPTER SIXTEEN
REVOLUTION STALKS OUR COUNTY!
Leading article, the Nottingham Mercury, 3 October 1817
The insurrectional state to which this county has been reduced for the last month has no parallel in history, since the troubled days of Charles I. Even the depredations of Luddism in these parts only five years ago did not carry the attendant threats upon the Sovereign, his Regent or Government which have been uttered these last weeks in the name of Justice.
The rioters appear suddenly in armed parties, under regular commanders. The chief commander, whoever he may be, is styled General Ludd. They march to their objective with military discipline, ten abreast, and as soon as the work of destruction is completed, the Leader draws up his men, calls the roll, each man answering to a particular number instead of a name; they then fire off their pistols, give a great shout and march off in regular military order.
In spite of curfews and a posse comitatus, the Authorities seem powerless to halt the wave of machine breaking which nightly threatens the prosperity of these parts, and so thorough is that destruction, so indiscriminate in its abuse of employers who are spoken of by their workers as bad and good alike, that We are of the opinion that the spectre of Jacobinism which stalked the Continent these past twenty years is come to our shores, and that only by the most vigorous action shall it be extinguished!
A week passed in which, despite the worst fears of the Mercury, the borough of Mansfield – and, indeed, most of the county – remained peaceable, and Hervey and Henrietta were able to enjoy an interlude of domesticity at the grange.
One afternoon, an orderly dragoon brought a letter from regimental headquarters in Nottingham. Hervey read it, twice, and then put it down. ‘I can scarcely believe it. The man must be an imbecile!’
‘Lord Towcester, I suppose?’ sighed Henrietta, laying aside her novel. ‘Tell me of it.’
‘He says that the uniforms of my troop are now in the worst condition of any in the regiment and that I must put in hand their replacement at once.’
‘And are they?’
He looked at her in some surprise. ‘How can I know? For I have seen none but my own troop for three weeks! Barrow’s was here for only a couple of days before Lord Towcester sent them back.’
She simply raised her eyebrows.
‘In any case, we’ve scarcely been chafing them for our own amusement!’
‘How shall you have them replaced?’
‘The men must pay for them themselves, or else I must. We’ll make claims on the borough, and the insurance companies for the fires we’ve put out, but I’ll warrant the money’ll be slow in the paying.’
She picked up her book again, and grinned. ‘Perhaps the clothiers of Mansfield can knit you all new tunics.’
‘Henrietta!’
‘But it is, I grant you, a strange preoccupation in the middle of all this skirmishing.’
‘Nothing I do seems to please Lord Towcester. Sir Abraham sent him a letter of appreciation and you’d think it had been a protest by the Prince Regent. It’s only when General Evans rides him that his stupidity’s at all curbed.’
‘And where is the general gone to, that Lord Towcester is let out of his asylum?’
‘London. To see Lord Sidmouth at the Home Office.’
She merely raised an eyebrow.
All this was really most dispiriting. Hervey was tired of talking about his commanding officer. ‘What do you read there?’
‘Miss Austen’s last novel. It is called Emma.’
‘Oh. A pretty name.’
‘Yes,’ she said, turning a page.
‘I wonder if Emma Lucie is married to Mr Somervile yet?’
‘I hope so. They sound very suited from what you spoke of him. But I have had no word from her in response to mine.’
‘Another two months at least, even by the Egyptian route.’
She raised another eyebrow.
He poured more tea. ‘Why did you say her last novel? Has Miss Austen declared she will write no more?’
‘Oh, Matthew! She died but two months ago. Did you not read of it?’
‘Evidently not. I am sorry of it. Was she very old?’
‘She was not three and forty! And, I confess, her passing made me most alert to my own mortality, for I had spoken with her in Bath only the month before you returned.’
‘My darling!’
She shook her head. ‘Did you ever read the book of hers I gave you?’
He had to own that he had not. ‘I confess it never engaged me.’
‘Matthew, do you ever read novels?’
‘Yes.’
‘Which last did you read?’
The answer came almost at once. ‘It was called Waverley.’
‘Was it of soldiery?’
He frowned. ‘There were some very romantic episodes.’
‘It was about soldiery! And how recently was it that you read?’
‘On board ship.’
Now she frowned. ‘The return or the outward passage?’
He sighed. ‘I prefer poetry.’
She laughed. ‘I know you do. Then I shall read to you tonight, when we are in bed. John Keats.’
He looked blank.
‘Don’t you remember? Mr Keble spoke of him when we were at the henge those three years ago, but I don’t think he’d been much heard of then. I have his first volume, published only this spring.’
He smiled in pleasant anticipation. ‘You know, I do very much like it here.’
She laughed again. ‘Of course you do, Matthew Hervey! You are surrounded by your dragoons, the lieutenant colonel is twenty miles away, and you have me with you!’
‘In that order?’
‘I think, probably, yes!’
They kissed, and would have moved closer, but a knock at the door reclaimed them. Private Johnson announced the Bow Street men.
‘Come in, gentlemen, come in,’ said Hervey, holding out his hand with a display of real pleasure. ‘You have been elusive this past week or so.’
‘Indeed we have, sir; indeed we have. Good afternoon, your ladyship.’
Henrietta smiled as warmly, and asked Johnson to bring more cups.
‘Sit down, gentlemen, please,’ said Hervey, helping them to chairs. ‘What brings you?’
‘I think we may be very close to a deciding bout,’ said the senior of the two. It seemed an apt metaphor, for he had always looked to Hervey like a man at home in the ring.
‘Indeed, Mr Wilks? Then I am all attention.’
The other investigator, the former insurance man, took out his pocketbook and sat poised to make notes. There was no look of the pugilist to Mr Bartle. Rather had he the appearance of an apothecary.
Wilks drained his teacup, drew forward in his chair and began to speak in a more confidential tone. ‘I do believe we know the identities of the leaders of the so-called Shirewood Brigade. It’s they that have been organizing the violence in the north of the county.’
Hervey nodded. ‘You know who is this “Enoch”?’
Wilks smiled. ‘That much was easy, sir. Enoch is a hammer.’
Hervey did not comprehend.
‘The hammers they use for machine-breaking. They’re called “Enochs” after the ironworks that makes them.’
Hervey felt a little foolish. ‘Do continue please, Mr Wilks.’
‘We had a meeting with General Evans last night in the castle when he got back from London.’ At this point Wilks looked rather uncomfortable. ‘I’m sorry, sir, but though I know we are in the borough’s pay, and you asked us here, we had a duty to the GOC.’
‘Of course, of course,’ said Hervey, who had never for once supposed that Bow Street men worked to as rigid a system of command as his.
‘Well, then, the Home Office, it seems, is of the opinion that although there is plotting against the government all over the place, it is haphazard. There’s no method in it. All their spies and informers suggest the same, that these Luddites are only associated with the conspirators by opportunity – by suggestion, even, for the most part. And the likes of Hunt and the Spa Fielders have no more connection with the trouble here than Bonaparte.’
Hervey was glad to hear it, but didn’t immediately see the implication.
‘If we can give one knockout blow to one of these “brigades” ’ – Wilks’s dislike of using an otherwise honourable term was quite evident – ‘then there’s a very good chance the others will be cowed into surrender – or, rather, inactivity. They’ll fear we’ve penetrated their secrecy entirely, and the threat of the gallows should do the rest.’
‘And we are now in a position to do this, to deliver this knockout blow?’
Wilks smiled, and a suggestion of the same came to the lips of his assistant. ‘We are, sir!’
‘Would you like more tea before you tell us how, Mr Wilks?’ asked Henrietta.
‘Indeed I should, ma’am!’
‘And you, Mr Bartle?’
‘Very much, your ladyship.’
She filled their cups and asked if they would prefer that she left.
Before Hervey could say anything, Wilks protested that indeed he would not. ‘For it was your information with regard to Mrs Stallybrass that began the trail to this evening, your ladyship.’
Henrietta seemed very gratified by this.
‘Well, sir, it seems that your ambuscading scheme has them running very scared. They can’t assemble in the numbers they need, especially since the posse is now so effective.’
It was now Hervey’s turn to feel gratified.
‘And your dragoons are so quick about the place that our night owls fear being counter-attacked if they do manage to concentrate. It’s the same at Worksop.’
Hervey was pleased to hear that Barrow was having equal success, though hardly surprised.
‘They’ve called a meeting tonight at the Crow’s Nest in Cuckney.’
Hervey knew the place. ‘About the remotest spot they could have chosen.’
Wilks agreed. ‘If they can get there, there’ll be every twisted-in commander in the north of the county – and one or two from as far afield as Derby and Yorkshire.’
‘How many?’
‘Upwards of twenty. And they’ll have their guards with them.’
Hervey blew out his breath. ‘Twenty! That would be a devil of a fight with twice the number of dragoons.’
Henrietta began to look anxious.
‘With three times the number!’ Wilks interjected. ‘These’ll be desperate men when they’re cornered. All of them’ll face the gallows.’
‘I shall have to send for help from Ollerton or Worksop.’
‘I’d rather you didn’t, sir,’ said Wilks. ‘It would be better that there was no extra movement of troops. They’ll be jittery, these men, and I wouldn’t want them frightened off. They’ll know your dragoons by sight by now, and they’d recognize reinforcements from a different troop.’
‘Then I shan’t be able to lay my ambushes tonight.’
‘No, sir. I wouldn’t want you to, for that might discourage a few as well. No, we want the birds to flock to the Crow’s Nest, like regular black crows of an evening.’
‘Rookeries, again, Mr Wilks?’ smiled Hervey.
‘Rookeries indeed, sir. How many birds does it take to make a rook pie, d’ye think?’
Henrietta rose, a little pale, and excused herself. Hervey made to follow, but she bade him stay. ‘Just a little air, that is all. I was never partial to the dish.’
‘Very well, gentlemen,’ said Hervey, sitting down again. ‘But I’m afraid I shall have to have a written request from a magistrate – either that or an order from my commanding officer.’
Wilks looked uncomfortable for the second time. ‘How can I put this, sir?’ He cleared his throat. ‘The GOC said, most emphatically, that we were to treat direct with you, and on no account to speak of it . . . in Nottingham itself. The general will be here himself by five, he said.’
Hervey made no comment. ‘So we shall ask Sir Abraham Cole?’
‘That would be best, sir,’ agreed Wilks. ‘Also, the general’s DAAG will come to apprise you of the position as regards the new Act.’
Hervey went to a writing table, dashed off a few lines to Sir Abraham, and called Private Johnson to have them delivered straight away to the moot hall, where the chairman of the bench had taken up residence. ‘Well then, gentlemen,’ he said, taking the stopper from a decanter of Madeira. ‘I imagine we have rather a lot of details to discuss!’
Sir Francis Evans arrived shortly before five. His ears were bright red as he stepped from the stirrups to the mounting block, and Hervey took note of the danger signal. His look was fearsome rather than merely angry, however, for there was a glint in his eye like a hungry bird of prey – a hawk which had spotted its quarry and was savouring the swoop. ‘Everything set, Hervey?’
‘Yes, General,’ Hervey replied surely. ‘There is just the bidding from the magistrate to come.’
‘Good. Better tell me your intention, then.’ Sir Francis pulled off his gloves and set about the dust on his sleeves with the utmost aggression.
Hervey took him to his map board, by which Johnson had already placed a steaming pot of coffee. ‘You don’t miss tricks much, do you, Hervey?’
‘Indeed, sir.’ Hervey assumed he meant the coffee.
‘Nor do I, Hervey. Nor do I!’
‘No, sir.’ Hervey was becoming a little lost, and thought he would press on with what he knew. ‘There is Cuckney, sir,’ he began, pointing out the little cluster of houses where the old Worksop and Chesterfield turnpikes crossed. ‘It’s eight or nine miles from here, and the roads are good. The Crow’s Nest was once a posthouse, and it has good-sized stables, with a few liveries still.’ He showed the general a sketch plan drawn from the recollection of the half-dozen dragoons who had visited there once or twice in the first days. ‘The Bow Street men say the Luddites will assemble over the space of an hour or so, under cover of regular taverners, and when all are come – by nine, they reckon – they will meet in the stables loft for about an hour and then disperse in time for the curfew.’
‘The trick will be judging the moment to take them. Has Barnaby instructed you?’
‘Yes, General. He arrived an hour ago. As I understand it, the new Act makes assembly for a seditious purpose illegal.’
‘Just so. It’s meant to stop jackanapes like Hunt from drawing the crowds and hotting ’em up, but it could serve our purpose, too, for if there isn’t enough evidence for charges under the common law for unlawful assembly, then we ought still to be able to net them for sedition. Either way it’ll be the rope.’
‘Mr Wilks says there will be an informer at the meeting, and that it will be his evidence that will convict.’
The general looked very satisfied.
‘But in the event that the man is not there, Mr Bartle will already be secreted in the loft to witness it.’
‘And how shall he get there without being seen?’
Hervey smiled. ‘It’s very ingenious, sir. He’ll take a—’
‘No,’ said the general sharply. ‘I don’t need to know.’
‘Very good, sir. So, we shall have our patrols about the roads before dark so as to give every appearance of the usual, and then they’ll make a proper show of retiring from the district, but they’ll assemble in the forest in subdivisions here.’ He pointed to half a dozen patches of green in a broad circle around Cuckney. ‘By the clock, they’ll leave their hides and make a cordon about the Crow’s Nest at a depth of about a furlong.’
‘That much is easy enough, Captain Hervey,’ the general agreed.
‘It will bring Spain back to mind, for sure, sir.’
The general saw that too. ‘And then what?’
‘Major Barnaby says that we stand to have things go badly against us if we do not call upon them to throw down their arms – assuming they will be armed, that is.’
‘It’s a very fair presumption, Hervey.’
‘And in truth, sir, I don’t wish to go in with fire against men who have not offered resistance.’
The general made a wry smile. ‘Tirez les premiers, Captain Hervey?’
Hervey sighed. ‘You yourself said it was a most objectionable business, firing on one’s own countrymen, General.’
‘Indeed I did, Hervey. Your forbearance does you credit. And, in truth, there’ll be more example in the gallows and the transport than dead meat.’
‘Quite, sir,’ he agreed, though a shade caught by the tone.
‘But see here, those are decent sentiments, and never should I wish the day to come when we had insufficient officers of that mind. But these will all be twisted-in men, looking the gallows in the face. You’re not to take any chances.’
Sir Francis’s robust support was very welcome. ‘No, sir. I intend that we shock them so greatly they will throw all in.’
‘Very well. And you shall have my best support.’
Hervey was not sure of his entire meaning. ‘Sir?’
‘I mean that I shall ride with you. I do not send men on such hazards while I warm myself by a fire!’
‘No, Sir Francis, indeed not,’ said Hervey, with a slightly anxious note. ‘But—’
‘If things go badly it’ll be me to answer for it, and I’m an infinitely harder fish to swallow than a captain of dragoons.’
‘I am very much obliged, sir.’ Hervey supposed that the disadvantages of the general’s interfering were outweighed by the safety he provided.
‘Well, then: do we eat before we go?’ said Sir Francis, with a proper smile at last.
‘Yes, General, in half an hour, when my cornet is back with the bidding from Sir Abraham Cole.’
‘Good. I’ll take a little Madeira with you until then.’
Johnson brought a new decanter.
‘There is one thing, Sir Francis,’ said Hervey cautiously as he took his glass.
He cleared his throat. ‘I am uneasy that I have not . . . not had the opportunity to speak with my commanding officer on this affair.’
Sir Francis Evans turned a gimlet eye on him, and his ear reddened. ‘Do not sport with me, Captain Hervey!’
Lieutenant Seton Canning moved like a seasoned woodsman along the forest track to where the last of the subdivisions stood waiting, the moon being up early and throwing all the light he needed. Corporal Clarkson was ready for him: ‘Subdivision fed and watered, carbines and pistols primed, nothing to report, sir.’ It had been the same with the others – all in their places, in good heart and eager for the chase.
‘Another half-hour, Corporal, and then we’ll break cover. Stand easy!’ Seton Canning lit a cigar.
Cuckney was about a mile to the south – the other subdivisions were a little closer – and timing was of the essence. The cordon had to be set by nine, so that if anything went wrong at the Crow’s Nest they would be able to net the assembly as they bolted. But there could be no movement from the coverts until the very last minute in case a latecomer detected them and alerted the rest. They might even bump into honest travellers, but that was a risk they would simply have to take, in which case they would detain the wayfarers until the affair was over. When the time came, Seton Canning’s dragoons would trot for half the distance to the hamlet along a green bridleway, which would take them four minutes; then, taking about the same time again, they would walk for the next quarter of a mile so as to make less noise, and then they would dismount and lead the horses the last furlong, posting dragoons at intervals until they met up with the other subdivisions and the whole village was encircled (this would probably take another ten minutes). They would therefore leave the covert at eighteen minutes to nine, a few minutes before the others.
‘It is just gone ten past eight, Sir Francis,’ said Hervey, closing his hunter.
‘Very well, then.’ The general’s orderly held down the offside stirrup as his principal mounted the handy little mouse dun, which he seemed excessively attached to, and beckoned to his ADC. ‘If that mare of yours is still horsing, and squeals so much as once, I’ll send the pair of you packing at once!’
‘Sir!’ The ADC was from the First Guards, and therefore wont to answer any enquiry or command with the simple affirmative, relying solely on its infinite tonal possibilities to convey meaning.
Hervey gave Henrietta a parting kiss, sprang into the saddle and gathered up the reins. Gilbert crabbed right and rear, backing into the ADC’s horse, which squealed and set her teeth at the grey’s rump.
‘For God’s sake, Harry!’ The general seemed much preoccupied with the behaviour of his ADC’s mare.
‘My fault, Sir Francis,’ owned Hervey. ‘He’s still a bit green about carriage lights.’
The chaise’s lights made a sweep of the party as it turned full circle in the yard.
‘All set, Serjeant Armstrong?’ called Hervey.
‘Ay, sir,’ came Armstrong’s voice from the window. ‘It’s a press, but we’re in.’
‘Very well, Mr St Oswald, lead on if you please.’
The general obliged Hervey greatly as they rode to Cuckney by saying nothing, except the occasional reproof to his long-suffering ADC. The moon gave the evening an almost merry feel, as if they were off to a levee or a ball. The first mile they did at a walk, and only a milk cart passed in the other direction (on the whole, Sherwood was not a place to be about after dark). Then they made a good trot on the macadamized turnpike – eight miles an hour – with something still in reserve.
Plans were all made, orders had been given; there was nothing for Hervey to do now but enjoy the ride – and relish, perhaps, what was to come. He found himself humming ‘Rule, Britannia’, until he supposed it not quite apt, and then remembered another of Thomson’s ballads.
‘Pour all your speed into the rapid game;
‘For happy he who tops the wheeling chase;
‘Has every maze evolved, and every guile disclosed;’
He had to search his memory hard for the rest, repeating the last line two or three times, so that more than once Johnson glanced his way.
‘Who knows the merits of the pack;
‘Who saw the villain seized, and dying hard,
‘Without complaint, though by a hundred mouths
‘Relentless torn: O glorious he, beyond
‘His daring peers!’
‘Is tha all right, Cap’n ’Ervey, sir?’ asked Johnson in the nearest thing to a whisper he could manage.
‘Yes,’ Hervey assured him. ‘Never better!’
All Saints’ church clock struck the half-hour as they trotted through Clipstone. The village was ill lit and the street empty, but dogs began barking and soon there were faces at the windows, and braver ones at doors.
‘Five minutes!’ called Lieutenant Seton Canning some time later in the northernmost covert. Men began stowing canteens and tightening girths. Soon the other subdivisions would be doing the same, taking the time by the flickering light of a candle (what a todo it had been to find enough watches!).
The road party sped on, up a long incline to where an old beacon tower kept lonely sentinel, the driver checking his team at the top for a steady descent.
‘Mount!’ Seton Canning’s order was hushed but clear, and eight dragoons, their corporal and lieutenant put left foot into stirrup, pushed up with the right and swung into the saddle. They formed twos on the track at the edge of the covert, and in a few minutes were trotting across the Worksop road and onto the green bridleway for Cuckney.
There was no clock to strike the three-quarter-hour for Hervey and his men, for they were in the middle of the broad oaks which had built the nation’s wooden walls. There was nothing but the odd forester’s hut between here and Cuckney, not a light to tell the time by, either. But the pace had been steady and even: he knew they could be neither late nor early by more than a very few minutes. In another mile or so, when they reached the old ford on the Meden, he would close up and read his hunter by the carriage lights.
Cuckney church had no carillon, but Seton Canning was confident of his timing as he led his mare the last furlong before deploying in their cordon position, the other three subdivisions doing the same thing on the further points of the compass. The horses were quiet, to Seton Canning’s and all the corporals’ relief: it was going well.
The long-case clock in the parlour of the grange struck the hour. Henrietta glanced up. Nine o’clock – was that not the time when . . . She turned back to her novel, trying to remember what she had just read. And still she felt sick.
A pheasant started noisily from under Corporal Cook’s feet, its alarm call sounding loud enough to carry to Nottingham. His subdivision froze. They remained stock-still for a full five minutes, until a vixen’s bark nearby gave them their alibi.
The road party was late by a mere four minutes at the ford, and these they made up easily on the straight incline to Warsop Hill next, where Hervey halted the party at twelve minutes past nine.
‘We’re at the rallying point, Sir Francis,’ he said. ‘You can see our object quite clearly, yonder.’ There were only one or two lights a quarter of a mile distant, but they stood out distinctly on the open heath about the crossroads. ‘I’ll leave Cornet St Oswald, and he’ll come at the signal.’
‘Very well, Captain Hervey. Do you recognize it if I say “Bestir yourself, and then call on the gods”?’ He held out his hand.
Hervey took it and smiled. ‘I do indeed, sir. And thank you for it. With your leave, then?’ He saluted, took off his shako, reined about and kicked on.
A minute later the chaise rolled up to the hamlet at a steady trot, the driver expecting a signal to halt at any second. It came just short of the old turnpike lodge, a lantern swinging in the middle of the road. ‘What’s yer business?’ The challenge was in the rough accent of the county.
‘Master Cutler on ’is way back to Sheffield!’
The sentry held up his lantern and moved towards the nearside door. Serjeant Armstrong had already slipped from the offside one.
‘Show yerself, please, Master Cutler,’ called the sentry.
Armstrong sprang on him from behind. His forearm was round the man’s throat in an instant, stifling any sound. ‘Not a word, lad, or you’ll feel my sabre in your side!’
Private Scriven was out too, a regular pocket Atlas. They bound the man up tight with horse bandages.
‘Pistol to ’is ’ead, Scriven,’ rasped Armstrong. ‘Wait on Mr Oswald’s men to take him off!’ He leapt back inside as the wheels began to turn.
‘Well done, Geordie Armstrong!’ said Hervey to himself. He would tell Caithlin of it, with the greatest satisfaction.
They slowed to a walk to turn into the Crow’s Nest yard. ‘Who goes there?’ came another challenge, this time from the shadows, and no lamp.
‘Master Cutler, homebound. We’ve a lame wheeler. Have you a livery?’
‘No liveries!’
‘We pay handsomely,’ called Hervey from behind, seeing a window open partially in the loft and then close again.
‘Why don’t you put t’other ’oss on then?’
‘Because he’s shy of the traces!’
The inquisitor stepped from the shadows. ‘The Master Cutler, d’ye say? I saw ’im meself only a fortnight back at t’Goose Fair.’ He put his hand to the door.
Armstrong had it open before he could turn the handle, driving his fist in the man’s face with all his strength. There was a muffled cry, which had Hervey turning for the loft with his pistol. But no window opened.
‘Come on, then!’ Hervey called, jumping from the saddle and ramming his shako back on his head.
Out from the chaise sprang Armstrong, five dragoons and Wilks, all now with shakos on, including the Bow Street man, for that was the surest way of recognition in the half-light and, God forbid, the smoke.
Up the outside steps they went, Wilks porting the sledgehammer. A footboard broke under Hervey’s boot. ‘Who’s there?’ came from inside.
‘Enoch!’ boomed Wilks, and swung the hammer with all his force.
The door jumped from its hinges. In they burst. Bedlam! Shots – swords – clubs – fists – smoke – screams – oaths – pleas.
On the road, St Oswald, the general and a dozen dragoons spurred to a gallop, and on the heath the cordon began walking in, sabres drawn, pistols ready, reins crooked on the arm.
‘Remember – no shooting without challenging first,’ bellowed Seton Canning. ‘And outside the cordon only! Outside only!’
A minute later St Oswald’s party was at the inn, seizing Luddites as they fled the yard in terror, and then running up the steps to the fight in the loft. But it was all over. There were half a dozen men on the floor, bleeding in varying degrees, one of them Corporal Troughton, who had covered Hervey well but painfully. Corporal Perrot was already binding up his shoulder. He’d live; as would four of the Luddites – for the time being at least. Another was stone dead, and four more were holding their hands so high they were touching the beams.
‘Right, you bastards, let’s have you all in the yard,’ growled Armstrong.
When they were gone, Bartle climbed down from the eaves. He dusted off his shoulders, then held up his pocketbook. ‘I have it all, sir.’
Hervey sighed, with no little relief. ‘You’ll both be very glad to get back to London, I’m sure!’
Wilks blew out the residue from his pistol pan. ‘Sir, I can’t tell you how fine it was to smell powder smoke once again!’